Looney Tunes
 

Looney Tunes - Golden Collection, Volume Two

Looney Tunes - Golden Collection, Volume Two

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Tweachewous Miscweants
In this second volume of the Golden Collection series, fans are treated to another mostly tasty round of Looney Tunes classics. Disc 1 is again given over to Bugs Bunny, and there are actually more of the zaniest and most subversive Bugs shorts here than in Volume 1. These include the immortality hysterical, and often weirdly twisted, "The Big Snooze," "Little Red Riding Rabbit," and "Tortoise Beats Hare," and my nominee for the most astonishing artwork and animation styles ever in "Gorilla My Dreams." (Before computers came along, did animation ever reach the technical heights, not to mention artistic accomplishments, of the 1940s Warner Brothers classics? I doubt it.) Discs 2 and 3 offer heaping helpings of Road Runner & Coyote and Tweety & Sylvester. This set also gives us a much greater look at the wondrously bizarre classics from the cracked mind of Bob Clampett, especially the early Porky & Daffy workouts "Baby Bottleneck," "The Great Piggybank Robbery," and the animation/live action B&W treat "You Ought to Be in Pictures."

With the inclusion of Disc 4 (a themed disc for pop culture and Hollywood-oriented shorts), this volume offers a great amount of overall WB variety, with room for the immortal classics "One Froggy Evening" and "What's Opera Doc," not to mention the impossibly bizarre "Porky in Wackyland," which really makes you wonder if anything on Earth in the late 1930s was as weird as the shorts coming out of Termite Terrace. In that regard, also check out one of the DVD extras, an archaically cheesy live action short starring monkeys, "Orange Blossoms for Violet," a very early project by Chuck Jones and Friz Freling. But aside from those classics, this volume shows a few cracks in the greatest-hits strategy of these DVD collections, as the variety sometimes seems forced. Here we get a smattering of old shorts that won't really be of interest to anyone but completists, such as the awkwardly unfunny non-star episodes "Have You Got Any Castles" and "The Dover Boys," and a few installments of the unlikable and mostly forgotten mouse duo Hubie and Bertie. In just the second volume of this crucial DVD series, diminishing returns are already becoming evident as Warner Brothers selects cartoons for variety and some sort of poorly-defined representativeness. But fortunately, there are still plenty of classics, not to mention immortally high-powered hilarity, in Volume 2 to make it an essential purchase for fans and collectors. [~doomsdayer520~]
2007-01-18
Hours of Fun
This made a great gift for my husband this Christmas. We've had lots of fun watching all of these episodes. It's like Saturday mornings all over again. I really appreciate the additional cartoons. Like, "I Love To Sing-a".
2007-01-14
As good as I remember
These are the real, original cartoons I saw as a kid. I bought them for my own kids, but found myself watching with them every time.
2007-01-11
Cartoon Classics
A good compilation of various Looney Tunes cartoons. It includes one of my favorites: "What's Opera Doc". The quality is excellent. It does have some lame cartoons as filler, but this is a very subjective opinion so take it for what it's worth.
2007-01-11
Looney tune review
They are great. Neat to see my favorite cartoons on DVD to be kept forever.
2007-01-11
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